Sunday, June 30, 2013

Spotlight on MPs as Treasury’s bid to tax flour, books is debated


The cost of food, medicines, electricity, books and agricultural inputs could rise sharply in the coming months if Parliament passes the VAT Bill 2013, which is to be tabled before it this week.
The cost of food, medicines, electricity, books and agricultural inputs could rise sharply in the coming months if Parliament passes the VAT Bill 2013, which is to be tabled before it this week. 
By EDWIN MUTAI
 
 
In Summary
  • The cost of food, medicines, electricity and agricultural inputs could rise sharply in the coming months if Parliament passes the VAT Bill 2013, which is to be tabled before it this week.
  • The taxman will also levy a 16 per cent VAT on agricultural inputs that are currently zero-rated with the exception of fertiliser

The battle for the minds and hearts of Kenya’s bottom millions is expected in Parliament this week as MPs open debate on the Treasury’s fresh bid to tax basic goods and services, risking a general rise in consumer prices.
(Read: Kenyans oppose VAT on basic food items)


Treasury secretary Henry Rotich has set the stage for round two of a battle his predecessor, Njeru Githae, lost by including basic commodities in the list of goods that qualify to be charged Value Added Tax (VAT).
The cost of food, medicines, electricity and agricultural inputs could rise sharply in the coming months if Parliament passes the VAT Bill 2013, which is to be tabled before it this week.


The government has in the past exempted these goods from VAT to make them affordable to millions of low-income consumers, but a copy of the Bill seen by the Business Daily shows that the Treasury has made a complete U-turn on the promise Mr Githae made to the 10th Parliament that it would spare the poor the pain of pricey basic goods and services through continued exemption from the consumption tax.


If passed without amendments, imported medical supplies and equipment, including human vaccines, will be charged VAT at the rate of 16 per cent, instigating a general rise in the price of medicines.


The taxman will make similar demands on ordinary paper and newsprint, setting the pace for a general rise in the cost of exercise books, newspapers, journals and periodicals. Families with young children will also dig deeper into their pockets to buy diapers, urine bags, and mosquito nets, among other sanitary materials if Parliament passes the Bill as proposed by Mr Rotich.


Martin Kisuu, the chief executive of Taxwise Consulting Limited, said the Treasury’s proposals mean that all food items will be taxable except in their raw state.


“Once processed into bread, flour, milk and rice products, they attract VAT,” he said on Friday after studying the VAT Bill 2013.


Mr Kisuu said that electricity bills will also rise as power joins the list of items that qualify to be VAT taxed at the top rate of 16 per cent instead of the current 12 per cent.


The taxman will also levy a 16 per cent VAT on agricultural inputs that are currently zero-rated with the exception of fertiliser, which remains exempted in the latest Bill though tax experts said the exemption will not shield the cost of this key farming input from rising.


“The real impact of this is to make fertilisers more expensive since the suppliers will no longer be able to recover VAT on their overheads and input costs,” said Mr Kisuu.


The Treasury, through the Value Added Tax Bill 2013, is also preparing to raid the aviation industry through imposition of new charges on aircraft landing and parking services.


The Bill, which the National Assembly through the chairman of the Finance, Planning and Trade Committee Benjamin Langat published on June 18, also opens the door for the taxman to rope into the tax bracket persons with diplomatic privileges who have been enjoying tax-free imports.


If the Bill passes unchanged, diplomats and persons who enjoy diplomatic privileges will only benefit from a one-off tax-free importation of goods upon entering Kenya.

The VAT Bill 2013 is also seeking to empower the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) to impose taxes on hides and skins and net additional revenue by taxing supplies intended for use in aid-funded projects that were exempted in the VAT Bill 2011. Business or users training and consultants providing services designed to improve work practices and efficiency of an educational organisation, including primary, secondary, technical college or university or institutions established for promotion of adult education, vocational training or technical education, will also be charged the tax if Parliament rubber-stamps the Treasury’s proposals.

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